Aaron Wiener
@aaronwiener.bsky.social
5.1K followers 39 following 110 posts
Berlin bureau chief @washingtonpost.com
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aaronwiener.bsky.social
A decade ago, Germany and France held things together while Europe's periphery struggled with debt.

Now France and Germany have doubts about whether they can sustain their social welfare spending. France is racking up debt, while Italy and Spain are thriving.

www.washingtonpost.com/world/2025/1...
Europe’s high quality of life is getting hard to afford. Just ask France.
The cost of Europe’s way of life — health care, affordable education and a dignified retirement for all, through high social spending — is becoming unbearably high.
www.washingtonpost.com
aaronwiener.bsky.social
Five minutes out from Erfurt, we're still on track to arrive just on time. Deutsche Bahn, you've done it!
aaronwiener.bsky.social
Incredibly, we arrived in Bamberg just two minutes behind schedule, and now, pulling out, we're projected to get to Erfurt on time. Deutsche Bahn might really get one for the win column.
aaronwiener.bsky.social
Pulling out of Nürnberg, we're now four minutes behind schedule. It's gonna be tight.
aaronwiener.bsky.social
Let's play this game again.

Yesterday, Deutsche Bahn lost. Now I'm on a train from Munich to Erfurt. We've made it to northern Bavaria, and so far we're still on time.

Can it hold? Stay tuned.
aaronwiener.bsky.social
An hour out from Munich, we're now projected to arrive 14 minutes late. I think this one's destined for the loss column.
aaronwiener.bsky.social
Now we're running 9 minutes late. Not looking good...
aaronwiener.bsky.social
We left Berlin on time. But then the train stalled in Dessau due to a "door problem."

We're now scheduled to arrive in Munich 5 minutes late, which by Deutsche Bahn's definition would be an on-time arrival.

But that's assuming nothing else goes wrong...
aaronwiener.bsky.social
I swear a German dog barked at me this morning for jaywalking.
aaronwiener.bsky.social
Berlin just tested its air raid sirens for the first time in 30 years. This is what it sounded like.
aaronwiener.bsky.social
A reader sends this haiku in response to my story today on how Germans work less than residents of any other wealthy country:

Industrious ants
Are no longer trending, freund.
Lilies of the field.
aaronwiener.bsky.social
Have Germans become the slackers of Europe -- and of the entire developed world? The data certainly says so.

www.washingtonpost.com/world/2025/0...
aaronwiener.bsky.social
Just over a year ago, Tesla was the No. 2 electric car seller in Germany, and its Model Y was the bestselling model.

Now Tesla has fallen to No. 9, and the Model Y is no longer in the top 10.
aaronwiener.bsky.social
This is recycling in Germany:
-Bring recyclables to building's trash room (but not on Sundays!) and sort into bins
-There's no bin for glass, so bring bottles to store to get deposit back
-The store can't take 2/3 of your bottles
-Hunt in the streets for glass recycling bins
-Repeat every 2-3 days
aaronwiener.bsky.social
It's easy to feel like for all of Germans' complaints, their train system is still 1000 times better than the American one. And that's not wrong. But when basically half of trains are arriving more than 6 minutes late (and some of them many hours late), it's not a great situation.
aaronwiener.bsky.social
Only 56% of German long-distance trains arrived within 6 minutes of the scheduled time last month.

Interestingly, things are much better on regional trains and on public transit (which is still a source of constant complaints among Berliners).
aaronwiener.bsky.social
Germany is having an identity crisis: It's trains no longer run on time. Not even close.

Here's how bad it's gotten: Switzerland has stopped allowing some German trains past the border city of Basel because they're messing up the (more reliable) Swiss network

www.washingtonpost.com/world/2025/0...
Germany’s identity crisis: The trains no longer run on time
Germans are deeply frustrated over a train system that is falling apart, undermining the punctuality that has long been core to Germany’s national self-image.
www.washingtonpost.com
aaronwiener.bsky.social
Also, hi! I'm fully installed here in Germany as the @washingtonpost.com Berlin bureau chief. Please follow me for news out of Germany and central Europe, and random musings on beer, trains, and sausages.
aaronwiener.bsky.social
15 years ago: Germany was Europe's debt police, forcing its neighbors to cut spending and cap deficits

Today: The German cabinet approves a budget that envisions a *172-billion-euro* deficit.

How did we get here? I explain:
www.washingtonpost.com/world/2025/0...
Germany, long tightfisted, goes on a spending spree with new budget
After constitutional changes earlier this year that released Germany’s “debt brake,” the cabinet unveiled a federal budget calling for historic borrowing.
www.washingtonpost.com